Pubdate: Wed, 15 Sep 1999 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 1999 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Tim Golden, and Steven Lee Myers U.S. PLANS BIG AID PACKAGE TO RALLY A REELING COLOMBIA With Colombia's government buckling under guerrilla attacks, a thriving drug trade and the worst economy in decades, the Clinton administration is putting together a major new effort to prop up the country's democracy that will include hundreds of millions of dollars in economic and military aid. The aid package, which is expected to be completed soon, will have large amounts of new military equipment, including arms and helicopters, as well as more intelligence support and training for Colombia's army and police units, senior administration and defense officials said. The administration is also planning new moves that officials hope will ease Colombia's economic crisis, strengthen the criminal-justice system and help local governments in the country's large, sparsely populated interior. But even before it has been completed, the plan is generating strong reservations among some within the administration who fear the United States is being drawn more deeply into a convoluted civil conflict that has left tens of thousands dead over nearly four decades. "It is going to be a very dangerous mess," said a senior official who has worked on Colombia. "And we are going to be in the middle of that mess." Not since the Central American civil wars of the 1980s has the United States been so tempted to come to the aid of a Latin American ally threatened by an insurgency. Pushed by a small group of Republican leaders in the Congress, the administration is already giving Colombia $309 million this year, making it the fourth-largest recipient of American aid after Israel, Egypt and Jordan. The administration's new effort will mark a significant shift in American policy toward Colombia after nearly two decades in which it has focused almost entirely on combating the cocaine trade and those who dominate it. While fighting drugs will remain a central goal, the United States is about to make a broader commitment to support Colombia's embattled government than it has in years. Administration officials said they had used months of wide-ranging discussions about the aid to reconsider American objectives and to press the government of President Andres Pastrana to come up with a comprehensive strategy to address the country's problems. Pastrana is expected to outline that strategy next week in a speech to the U.N. General Assembly and in meetings with officials in Washington. The administration has not yet decided how large its package of aid will be, but the officials said that in their internal discussions it ranged from $1 billion to $1.5 billion over the next three years. They said the size of the package was not likely to be settled until the White House and Congress resolve their increasingly contentious fight over balancing the budget. But the discussions have also been complicated by deep divisions within the administration itself over how and how deeply to get involved. Some more hawkish officials, led by the White House's drug-policy adviser, former Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey, are pressing for a large increase in assistance to Colombia's armed forces. Citing "a drug-related emergency," McCaffrey has called for at least $1 billion aid concentrated on the military and police. At the Pentagon, however, there are reservations about how deeply to get involved with Colombia, a country with two leftist guerrilla armies fighting the government, right-wing paramilitary forces fighting the guerrillas, and civilians ever in the crossfire. The perils of a stronger American role came into clearer relief in July when a U.S. spy plane crashed into a mountainside during a counterdrug mission, killing five American soldiers and two Colombians. Officials at the State Department and the National Security Council, in particular, have pressed to broaden Washington's agenda in Colombia while trying to limit its involvement in the war. These officials have played down the immediate threat to Pastrana's government, arguing that a modest rise in military aid should be balanced by support for social-development projects, the economy and a negotiated settlement to the war. Administration officials say they have made it clear to the Colombians that increased American support will come with pressure for changes within Colombia, including greater efforts to clean up human-rights abuses by the military, and a new, probably tougher government approach to the peace talks with the insurgents. But while Clinton administration officials say that they will not dictate policies to Pastrana, some Colombian officials involved in the aid negotiations already appear uncomfortable with the growing American role. "We have a strategy," a senior Colombian official said curtly, suggesting that the administration's elaborate search for a new approach was little more than packaging for a new financing pitch to Congress. U.S. aid to Colombia fell sharply after the Bush administration, which had targeted the Andean countries in an attempt to stem the flow of cocaine at its source. But American aid to the Colombian military and police has risen steadily since 1996, and the Colombian army has also bought new loads of American arms. The new engagement of the Clinton administration is partly a consequence of its close ties to Pastrana, who came to office a year ago. In the previous four years Washington had essentially boycotted the government of his predecessor, Ernesto Samper, after evidence emerged that his political campaign had taken huge contributions from cocaine traffickers. Despite their early hopes for Pastrana, however, U.S. officials generally describe his efforts to negotiate with the guerrillas as a failure that has left the insurgents stronger and more defiant. Nor do these officials hide their view that Colombia's multiple crises may be beyond Pastrana's capacity to resolve. Colombia's cocaine industry, which has long depended on coca leaf from Peru and Bolivia, is becoming more self-sufficient as it grows more of its own coca and a new, more potent strain of the plant is introduced, intelligence analysts say. Last year, the CIA estimated that Colombia could have produced about 165 metric tons of cocaine from its own crop, up from 65 metric tons in 1993 and 80 metric tons in 1995. This year, according to an internal government document, analysts expect Colombian traffickers to produce as much as 250 tons. The increase comes despite a jump of nearly 50 percent in American drug-eradication efforts last year, and it is concentrated largely in fields that are guarded or taxed by leftist guerrillas or right-wing paramilitary groups, the document indicates. Many American officials believe the guerrillas -- particularly those of the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia -- have reaped a windfall from the coca boom that has turned them into a far more serious military threat. In a move to build trust with the FARC, as the rebel group is known, Pastrana withdrew army troops from a large swath of the rebel-dominated countryside last November. The move drew open dissent from his officer corps, however, and the guerrillas have shown little sign of compromise since. In July, the talks were suspended after the insurgents refused to accept observers in the demilitarized zone, and the rebels launched one of their biggest offensives in years. "Pastrana seems to have bent all the way over in a Gumby-like way," an American military official said. "He's about used up what he's got to offer, and it is not working." Administration officials are less critical of Pastrana's economic management, but his political standing has also been hurt by economic troubles that were long in the making: the worst recession in decades, a growing debt burden and an unemployment rate that has reached nearly 20 percent. The worsening situation began to command the attention of the White House this summer, officials said, when an interagency meeting presided over by President Clinton's national security adviser, Sandy Berger, turned from a discussion of Caribbean radar installations to the turmoil in Colombia. "This is a third-order issue that is going to become a first-order issue," two officials quoted Berger saying. Officials said Berger asked those present to consider what additional aid Colombia needed. The initial result, however, was a deluge of different and sometimes contradictory proposals. On July 13, McCaffrey struck preemptively, writing Cabinet members to warn of an "explosion of coca cultivation" in Colombia. His letter, which was quickly and widely leaked to the news media, outlined $1 billion in new spending, most of it for Colombia, including $360 million to help the army expand its reach in southern Colombia and $120 million to increase the interdiction of drug flights. Officials at the Pentagon and the State Department drew up their own lists, and different priorities emerged. Law-enforcement officials argued for more support for Colombian police anti-drug operations and the country's judicial system. State Department officials pushed proposals ranging from trade benefits to temporary refuge for Colombian immigrants to the United States. "You are getting policy by proposal rather than by planning," said Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vt. "Everybody seems to agree, 'Hey, let's send some money down there.' But I have heard relatively little discussion or debate about what the U.S. interests are." White House and State Department officials said they had been struggling to define those interests more clearly in a series of meetings over the course of the summer. For the most part, these officials take pains to sound less alarmed than McCaffrey and Republicans on Capitol Hill, who have grown increasingly critical of Clinton's policies. After visiting Bogota last month, the undersecretary of state for political affairs, Thomas R. Pickering, said he was "sobered but certainly not panicked" by Colombia's problems. In fact, some military analysts believe the Colombian army has been doing better against the guerrillas in recent months. Additionally, a secret assessment by American intelligence recently estimated that the rebels' profits from the drug trade ranged from perhaps $30 million to $100 million a year -- far less than the amounts cited publicly by some officials, including McCaffrey. The Clinton administration's more deliberate approach also owes much to battles being fought far from Colombia. Last fall, the administration was caught off guard by an emergency spending plan drafted by Republicans in Congress that added $287 million in antidrug and military aid to Colombia almost overnight. This year, officials said they are determined not to be outflanked again, although prominent conservatives in the House have drafted their own wish lists, including one by Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., that calls for $930 million in new aid. So the administration has devised an early plan of its own. In an effort to inject energy into the peace talks, the United States will press both sides to heed the experience in countries like El Salvador and Nicaragua and accept international mediation. And to shore up Colombia's economy, administration officials said they are backing talks with the International Monetary Fund for as much as $3 billion in financing, in addition to cash support from the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank. Nevertheless, the bulk of American aid will go to military and antidrug operations. The officials said it would probably include a squadron of new helicopters for the Colombian army, a package of excess equipment from the Pentagon and considerable training for Colombian soldiers and police. American soldiers and advisers have already begun training a new antidrug battalion of 950 soldiers and 200 police officers, which is to finish its training in December. The officials said the administration would most likely approve training for two more battalions. "To deal with the drug problem," a senior administration official said, "you have to deal with the guerrillas intimately involved in the drug problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake